Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess whether proximal renal tubules generate excess hydroxyl radical (.OH) during hypoxia/reoxygenation or ischemia/reperfusion injury, thereby supporting the hypothesis that reactive oxygen species contribute to the pathogenesis of postischemic acute renal failure. In the first phase of the study, rat isolated proximal tubular segments (PTS) were subjected to hypoxia (95% N2- 5% CO2) for 15, 30, or 45 min, followed by 15 to 30 min of reoxygenation in the presence of sodium salicylate, a stable .OH trap. Cellular injury after hypoxia and reoxygenation was assessed by lactate dehydrogenase release; .OH production was gauged by hydroxylated salicylate by-product generation (2,3-, 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acids (DHBA); quantified by HPLC/electrochemical detection). Continuously oxygenated PTS served as controls. Despite substantial lactate dehydrogenase release during hypoxia (8 to 46%) and reoxygenation (8 to 11%), DHBA production did not exceed that of the coincubated, continuously oxygenated control PTS. In the second phase of the study, salicylate-treated rats were subjected to 25 or 40 min of renal arterial occlusion +/- 15 min of reperfusion. No increase in renal DHBA concentrations occurred during ischemia or reperfusion, compared with that in sham-operated controls. To validate the salicylate trap method, PTS were incubated with a known .OH-generating system (Fe2+/Fe3+); in addition, rats were treated with antioxidant interventions (oxypurinol plus dimethylthiourea). Fe caused marked DHBA production, and the antioxidants halved in vivo DHBA generation. In conclusion, these results suggest that exaggerated .OH production is not a consequence of O2 deprivation/reoxygenation tubular injury.
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